This is an ALL solid mahogany uke, finished in a beautiful oil varnish in our Roswell, Ga workshop. Elegantly simple purfling around the soundhole. No plywood to be found in this professional quality, American-made traditional ukulele. The Old Mill Soprano Ukulele has a rosewood fingerboard with inlaid dot markers. The bridge is rosewood as well. All internal bracing and linings are of the finest spruce.
This soprano ukulele has 13-3/4" scale length.
- Standard Tuning for a soprano ukulele: g'c'e'a'…the 4th string is actually a higher note than the 3rd string.
- Alternative Tuning: The most common alternative tuning is a'd'f#'b'
This instrument is fit with traditional ukulele friction pegs, but you can upgrade to the revolutionary Pegheds™ 4:1 ratio planetary geared pegs, which look exactly like really traditional violin-type pegs. See the images.
Tenor Ukulele by Old Mill
This full-size tenor ukulele is ALL solid mahogany, finished in a beautiful oil varnish in our Roswell, Ga workshop. Elegantly simple purfling around the soundhole. No plywood to be found in this professional quality, American-made traditional ukulele. The Old Mill Soprano Ukulele has a rosewood fingerboard with inlaid dot markers. The bridge is rosewood as well. All internal bracing and linings are of the finest spruce. This tenor ukulele has 17-3/32" scale length.
- Standard Tuning for a tenor ukulele: gc'e'a'. This is almost like the soprano ukulele; however, the 4th string on a tenor is an octave lower than the 4th string on a soprano
- Alternative Tunings: The most common alternative tuning is d'gbe' (with this alternative tuning, the 4th string is a higher note than the 3rd string). Tenor ukes are sometimes strung with special strings and tuned exactly like a soprano ukulele, but with a far more powerful sonority.
This instrument is fit with traditional ukulele friction pegs, but you can upgrade to the revolutionary Pegheds™ 4:1 ratio planetary geared pegs, which look exactly like really traditional violin-type pegs. See the images above.
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Posted by: Aryana | 03/12/2010 at 08:11 AM